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С¸£Àûµ¼º½ College
First-Year Experience

Scribner Seminar Program
Course Description

The Broadway Musical: An American Cultural Lens

Instructor(s): Charles M. Joseph, Professor of Music

Have you ever seen musical theater professionally staged on Broadway, or participated in a high-school show? Was the production merely entertaining; or did it also encourage you to think about the issues raised through the show’s coordinated efforts of writing, singing, acting and dancing? С¸£Àûµ¼º½ in this seminar will consider the diverse artistic ingredients of a musical that must blend in achieving a collaborative balance. We will study the creative process: how a show evolves, why adjustments occur, and how artists make decisions; but we will also look beyond, by exploring recurring sociological perspectives evident throughout 20th-century American Musical Theater history. The Broadway Musical provides a looking glass into our nation’s shifting cultural attitudes, challenging societal issues, and individual and collective struggles and triumphs. The musicals we will examine include South Pacific (gender, race and prejudice); West Side Story (urban violence); Hair (confronting established conventions); and Sweeney Todd (ethical and moral dilemmas). С¸£Àûµ¼º½â€™ final projects will focus on a specific musical and the questions it raises.

Course Offered